Intel and VIA Technologies are both readying new platforms aimed at
ultra-mobile devices (UMDs), portable systems smaller than a laptop but still
based on PC technology. If new designs can overcome the problems of limited
processing power and short battery life that have so far plagued UMDs, such
devices may yet find a
market as an alternative to the corporate laptop.
UMDs are somewhat loosely defined. It is a category that takes in
ultra-mobile PCs
(UMPCs)
such as
OQO’s
Model e2 and
Samsung’s
Q1 Ultra but it also overlaps somewhat with the ultra-portable end of the
laptop spectrum, and also includes even smaller devices such as internet
tablets.
While there has been a great deal of interest around UMPCs, their small size
has largely been a limitation, with many of the early devices seen as
underpowered next to laptops, while still only lasting for an hour or two on
battery power.
“The overall usability of UMPCs is not sufficient, while their prices have
typically been much higher than laptops,” said Ovum senior analyst Carl Gressum.
For example, some UMPCs have prices near £1,000 yet only have a touch screen for
input, while a business laptop with a much larger screen may cost only half as
much.
The first UMPC models have typically been based on standard laptop chips, but
processors specially designed to meet the constraints of UMPCs should be able to
provide a greater level of performance and make more frugal use of battery
power.
Intel’s
Silverthorne
chip is due in the second quarter of 2008 and is expected to consume about half
a watt of energy. This is a tenth as much as a typical laptop processor, yet it
will have comparable performance to the first generation of Centrino laptops,
according to Intel.
The firm gave more details on Silverthorne at last week’s International Solid
State Circuits Conference, although the official name of the chip has yet to be
disclosed.
“This is a ground-up new microarchitecture designed expressly for low-power
operations,” said Intel chief technology officer Justin Rattner.
Although it is Intel’s smallest chip since the 486, it still keeps
compatibility with mainstream processors, he added. Combined with a chipset
codenamed Poulsbo, the new processor makes up Intel’s Menlow platform for UMPCs.
Meanwhile, VIA Technologies unveiled its new processor last month. Code-named
Isaiah,
it replaces the C7 chip, which has already proved successful in several UMPC
designs, such as OQO’s. Due to ship by mid-2008, it will have clock speeds up to
2GHz.
Although it will not completely replace the C7, Isaiah is claimed to offer
twice the performance while keeping within the same power envelope, and is
pin-compatible so that existing designs can easily be upgraded with the new
processor.
A 1GHz chip based on this architecture will consume an absolute maximum of
3.5W in a worst-case scenario, according to VIA, and well below 1W when idle.
“The primary markets for Isaiah will be UMPCs, UMDs, small form factor
desktops and media centres. However, with excellent power efficiency we believe
chips based on the architecture will also be adopted in mainstream notebooks and
PCs,” said Richard Brown, VIA’s vice president of marketing.
Brown said there are a number of features in the chip that boost performance,
including a new superscalar microarchitecture, a fast floating point unit to s
peed multimedia processing, and 1MB of L2 cache.
More significantly, the chip adds 64bit instructions and support for handling
virtual machines, features set to be increasingly important in the corporate
market.
While the launch speeds for both Silverthorne and Isaiah have yet to be
disclosed, VIA has already said it believes its chip may outperform Intel’s,
because of its superscalar architecture and other features.
But performance issues aside, many industry observers remain unconvinced that
there is a market for UMPCs, outside of vertical applications and those few
executives and IT professionals prepared to pay almost anything to have the
smallest PC available.
“The problem is not the hardware, but that there is no specific area where
UMPCs excel against other products, such as smartphones and laptops,” said
Ovum’s Gressum.
Eszter Morvay, senior research analyst for personal computing at IDC, agreed
that UMPCs and UMDs are currently a poorly defined category of client device.
“The usage scenarios for UMPCs are quite obscure, and they have only had appeal
to niche markets so far,” Morvay added.
There is also a sense among some experts that the UMPC is a solution looking
for a problem, and that vendors such as Intel are pushing the concept simply as
a way to sell more PC chips, rather than trying to meet a specific business
requirement.
Morvay argued that although the UMPC format has industry support, this does
not guarantee that it will succeed.
“It’s not just VIA and Intel, but also AMD and Microsoft. Key vendors are
behind it, but this doesn’t mean buyers want it just look at what happened
with consumers and Media Center PCs,” Morvay said.
Comments
Have your say on this article